Idiom: What does breaking mean? What kind of allusions and stories are there?

Idiom: a brief explanation of the idiom of broken silk couplets. : 4497 idiom: broken silk couplet phonetic notation: ㄡˇㄉㄨㄢˋㄙㄌ |ㄢˊChinese pinyin: dǒu duàn s and Li á n reference words: broken silk See the article Broken Silk. Emoji symbol: couple (this is the Chinese character "couple" originally collected by this website, which corresponds to the emoji expression package "". It adds vivid symbols to Chinese characters, compares PNG pictures with animated GIF pictures, and is also convenient for everyone to copy and paste into social media and other places. Click on the emoji symbol ""and the picture link to see a more detailed introduction of this symbol in the EmojiAll emoticon dictionary. ) Detailed explanation of idioms and allusions: The following is the allusions of "broken silk" for your reference. Lotus root is a common edible plant. It is the rhizome of lotus, which grows horizontally in the soil under the water. It is fat, jointed and hollow. Because there are filaments connected in the middle when cutting, it is often used to describe the surface disconnection between the two, but in fact it is still involved. Meng Jiao, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, described the melancholy and sadness of an abandoned wife. The first four sentences: "Your heart is broken in the mirror." My heart is in the lotus root, although I am still involved. It means: my husband's heart is like a mirror, it is difficult to recover if it is broken; And my heart is like lotus root silk. Although the lotus root is broken. In the poem, "box mirror" and "lotus root silk" are compared, indicating that Lang Xin is as hard as iron and unwilling to give up on himself. Later, the idiom "broken silk" evolved from here, meaning that the relationship has not been completely cut off. Canon Source: Here is the canon source of Broken Silk Company for your reference. Jiao's poem Qu Fu (quoted from The Whole Tang Poetry). 374 volumes. Meng Jiao ") in the mirror, all broken. Concubine lotus root1> Zhong Si, though broken, is still implicated. An Zhi, Empire Wheeler, turned around today. A woman is a husband, and encore can move the sky again. You listened to the crane and moaned seven strings. [Note] (1) Lotus root: the underground stem of lotus. White, fatty, with tubular holes in the middle, edible. Documentary evidence: 0 1. Song and Huang Ji's Ci Manchu. Twenty years: "Humanity is like a goose, and love is like a clock." The "lotus root" at the beginning of idioms solitaire's idiom.

The word "Lian" at the end of idioms

Detailed explanation of Yu Ying-Julian idiom "broken silk couplet" with reference to A Chinese Dictionary;

Break the knot.